Nokia 6630 was introduced in 2004 Q2. GSMArena reviews the Nokia 6630 and writes about camera, “Testing the Nokia 6630 graphic capabilities finally proved that it’s not exposure compensation at all. That’s because you can apply brightness and contrast on a picture that have been already taken and it doesn’t affect the time and ISO sensitivity during shooting (aperture is not changing with camera phones). That’s a problem, because this way you can’t do anything with e.g. the overexposed sky. You can’t create 1 and 0 by magic on a place where is no information at all, only white space. You’ll get white or grey space and in the worst case banding will appear. Using the exposure compensation the photographer could set the camera to release more light to the sensor and get this way nicely drawn clouds.”
3G reviews the Nokia 6630 and writes about camera, “The on-board camera is a 1.3 megapixel camera which produces results as good as any other camera phone currently available. If you wanna be a paparazzi photographer, this phone has a new feature called “sequency” which provides for fast sequential picture snapping.”
InfoSync reviews the Nokia 6630 and writes, “it’s not as fast as recent Windows Mobile smartphones, nor even the Series 60-powered Sendo X. Still, it’s sufficiently snappy, and includes a range of attractive hardware features, among which we find a sensible selection of Bluetooth profiles - including the HID profile to enable input accessories such as keyboards - and a Pop-Port connector which provides USB connectivity. Thankfully, Nokia has omitted support for Infrared, a choice we find quite acceptable given the recent proliferance of Bluetooth.”
CNET reviews the Nokia 6630 and writes, “The Symbian OS of the 6630 is a speedy performer in terms of menu navigation, messaging and general operation. Apart from the usual PIM functions like calendar and calculator, this model, like the 6670, comes with Quickoffice for document editing and viewing of email attachments. The preloaded Chinese-to-English dictionary is also useful.”
Mobique talks about synchronisation, “Synchronisation capabilities are available to the calendar, contacts, notes and to-do list – with both local and remote sync options open to its user. For local operations, it requires the installation of the Nokia PC Suite software (which should have been included with the sales package, or alternatively downloadable from Nokia’s support web site pages) and can be connected to a compatible PC via either Bluetooth or Pop-Port (USB-based) data cable.”
Mobile-Review reviews the Nokia 6630 and writes about screen, “The screen doesn’t differ from ones in other Nokia smartphones in physical parameters (65K, TFT). The resolution is 176×208 pixels (35×41 mm) and the screen shows up to 8 text and one service line. In general the screen is comparable with ones in similar phones, that’s not bad. The picture looks vivid, the colours are not very bright, a bit dim. Considering that the interface is drawn according to the capabilities of the phone no any feeling of a lack of brightness or contrast of the picture appears. The screen is not bad for this segment but should not be compared with the screens of usual phones, that would be incorrect. It fades in the sun but in the majority of cases information may be read.”

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